‘It is frustrating that the British media has leapt upon Emile Ratelband’s shenanigans as though they are newsworthy.’
Photograph: Robin Utrecht/Rex/Shutterstock

Last week, Stonewall published a report that found that more than one in 10 trans people have attempted to take their own lives in the past year, and nearly half of all trans people have considered it. This indicates a mental health crisis that is at epidemic levels within the trans community, so I’d say it’s a good thing that many countries have decided to take small measures to make it a little easier for trans people to be true to their gender identities.

Dutch man, 69, starts legal fight to identify as 20 years younger

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These cases are but two in a rather sad tradition of men pursuing frivolous lawsuits that undermine LGBT rights: in March of this year, the anti-LGBT activist Chris Sevier attempted to marry his laptop in protest against the introduction of equal marriage in Utah (the case was dismissed on the grounds that the laptop was not legally old enough). That the phenomenon of the male egomaniac remains a fact of life is unfortunate. And one of the downsides of attempting to maintain a free society is that preposterous stunts such as these must occasionally be indulged in public courts. And yet it is frustrating that the British media has leapt upon Ratelband’s shenanigans as though they are newsworthy, describing him straightforwardly as a “pensioner”, taking his justifications at face value.

Instead, the hot take machine has been duly cranked up, and producers have been soliciting pundits to appear on the airwaves to debate whether changing one’s age is in fact the same as changing one’s gender. Even a cursory Googling reveals that one premise of Ratelband’s decision is nonsense: people are already able to conceal their ages on Tinder simply by upgrading to a paid version – a much cheaper and more discreet solution than a lawsuit that makes international headlines. But, of course, worldwide brouhaha was the entire point of this silly exercise, as Ratelband is in fact one of the Netherlands’ most notorious trolls – as Dutch social media users have desperately been trying to tell anyone who will listen.

Years ago, Ratelband was rebuffed by Dutch courts after attempting to name his twins Rolls and Royce. In 2003, he attempted to found a political movement named The Ratelband List, which failed to win a single seat. Little is available online about this wee venture, although he attended the unveiling of a statue in honour of the late far-right politician Pim Fortuyn. Unsurprising, then, that Ratelband also used his Washington Post interview as an opportunity to praise Donald Trump, observing: “Trump is the first one who is honest. He shows his emotion on Twitter, saying to everyone, ‘Shut up.’ He’s a new kind of person.” At the time of writing, more than 51,000 Twitter users follow Ratelband’s account, which describes him as a “motivational speaker” and is littered with wellbeing quackery and faux-spiritual absurdities.

Why has this attention-seeker been described in most UK news reports as simply a “pensioner”? And why are trans people, yet again, being forced into the position of defending the meagre law changes that have been made to safeguard their mental and physical health? As Shon Faye, a writer and columnist who is trans (and, disclaimer, my friend) put it to a producer who asked her to respond to this story: “Interesting how there’s never time to discuss what might be factors at play in the extreme mental health crisis in my community but always time for nonsense.”

If only it were possible to conclude that Ratelband has consummately humiliated himself on the international stage, but the truth is he’s played a blinder. He knew exactly how to put on this ludicrous little melodrama, and the media has played its expected part with aplomb. It would be funny if an already marginalised group of people didn’t have to suffer as a result. Trans people deserve better than this. I dare say we all do.